Journal article

Negotiating ‘ideal worker’ and intensive mothering ideologies: Australian mothers’ emotional geographies during their commutes

L Rodriguez Castro, M Brady, K Cook

Social and Cultural Geography | ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD | Published : 2022

Abstract

Individualized, maternalist and marketized discourses of childcare are pervasive in Australia as they are in other liberal welfare states. Responsibility is overwhelmingly placed on mothers to carry out most childcare work themselves or to arrange informal or paid childcare. One of the key tasks for most employed mothers is transporting children alongside their commuting journeys. In this context we used mapping/graphic elicitation interviews with 45 Australian employed mothers to explore their commuting experiences through the lens of emotional geographies. Our findings reveal that mothers’ experiences of their commutes were shaped by negotiations with intensive mothering and ‘ideal worker’..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

This research is funded via an Australia Research Council Discovery Project [DP160101816 Addressing Childcare Flexibility]; University of Queensland Senior Research Fellowship to Michelle Brady [No. 2016000064: Addressing childcare inflexibility in a 24/7 economy] and an Australian Research Council Future Fellowship to Kay Cook [FT160100115: Women's Access to Child Support].